domingo, 31 de julho de 2022

Balanço Mensal (Julho 2022)


Em Julho terminei Mansplainer de Avery Flynn e O Ano da Morte de Ricardo Reis de José Saramago (finalmente!). Também li Training Lady Townsend de Annabel Joseph e Dreams of a Dark Warrior de Kresley Cole e estou a ler Persuasão de Jane Austen.




E ouvi dois audiolivros: Play the Hand You Were Dealt de M. Jay Granberry e A Breakers Wedding de Laurie Roma.




Publiquei novamente oito opiniões. Vamos lá a ver como corre agora em Agosto...


Em Julho desgracei-me e comprei doze livros:













2022 Reading Challenge



Li 40 livros, o que significa que estou no bom caminho...



Desafio Serial Killer 2022




Preenchi mais uma casa do cartão.

  • Séries continuadas:
    • A Touch of Taboo, de Katee Robert
    • Westen, de Suzanne Ferrell
    • The Hathaways, de Lisa Kleypas
    • Immortals After Dark, de Kresley Cole
    • Insta-Spark Collection, de Melanie Moreland 
    • The Rules of Scoundrels, de Sarah MacLean
    • Jock Hard, de Sara Ney
    • Rookie Rebels, de Kate Meader
  • Séries terminadas:
    • Highland Spies, de Victoria Roberts
    • Muses of Mayfair, de Sara Ramsey
    • The Hard and Dirty Holidays, de Celia Aaron 
    • Last Man Standing, de Avery Flynn



Goodreads recomenda 2022


Em Julho não li nenhum livro para este desafio, mas li um que estava nas opções do mês de Junho: Training Lady Townsend de Annabel Joseph. Gostei bastante.




Estas são as minhas opções para Agosto:




Bingo Profissão do Herói 2022


Não preenchi nenhuma casa.


sexta-feira, 29 de julho de 2022

Cover Reveal: In a Jam by Kate Canterbary



Kate Canterbary has revealed the
cover and blurb  for In a Jam!




Releasing August 30, 2022

When Shay Zucconi's step-grandmother died, she left Shay a tulip farm--under two conditions.

First, Shay has to move home to the small town of Friendship, Rhode Island. Second--and most problematic since her fiancé just called off the wedding--Shay must be married within one year. 

Marriage is the last thing in the world Shay wants but she'll do anything to save the only real home she's ever known.

Noah Barden loved Shay Zucconi back in high school. Not that he ever told her. He was too shy, too awkward, too painfully uncool to ask out the beautiful, popular girl. 

A lifetime later, Noah is a single dad to his niece and has his hands full running the family business. That old crush is the farthest thing from his mind.

Until Shay returns to their hometown and turns his life upside down. 



Preorder your copy today!
Apple Books: https://apple.co/3RHRzbP
Nook: https://bit.ly/3cvh67V
Kobo: https://bit.ly/3v2TwWu

Goodreads: https://bit.ly/3uxV76m











Meet Kate Canterbary



USA Today Bestseller Kate Canterbary writes smart, steamy contemporary romances loaded with heat, heart, and happy ever afters. Kate lives on the New England coast with her husband and daughter.
 
Connect with Kate
Website | www.katecanterbary.com
Goodreads | https://bit.ly/38egGxI
Amazon | https://amzn.to/3v2adBu
Facebook | https://www.facebook.com/kcanterbary
Facebook Group | https://www.facebook.com/groups/TheWalshery/
Instagram | https://bit.ly/3oiBY56
TikTok | https://bit.ly/3oobDlP
Twitter | https://bit.ly/3oobNJX
Bookbub | https://bit.ly/3IQf9iy
Newsletter | https://geni.us/officememos

Cover Reveal: The Mix Up by Rebecca Wilder

 
We are so excited to share the cover reveal for The Mix Up by Rebecca Wilder, the next book in the Meet Cute Book Club Series. Keep reading for more details about this sexy, grumpy sunshine romance.

Title: The Mix Up

Author: Rebecca Wilder

Release Date: 8/25/2022

Genres: Contemporary Romance

Trope: Grumpy Sunshine Romance, Small-Town Romance

 

Arlowe

“I think that there’s been some kind of mix up.”

That’s my first clue that my stay in Lilac Harbor isn’t going to go according to plan.

There’s been a mistake with my rental booking and now instead of having the charming little bungalow on the shore all to myself, I’ve got a not so charming roommate.

Yates Warner.

He’s a grump in every since of the word, but there’s something about the guarded translator that tugs at my heartstrings.

I’m determined to make the best of this situation, and who knows? Maybe my grumpy giant and I can even be friends.

Yates

Yeah, we’re definitely never going to be friends.

Arlowe Mitchell is too sweet for a grouchy loner like me. She’s too friendly, too generous, and way too optimistic.

Also, incredibly too tempting.

The more time that I spend with her, the more that I want her.

When she tells me about the newest book her book club is reading and says how she always wanted to have a summer fling like the characters, I finally get my opening.

A four-week fling. No strings attached and we part at the end of the month to go our separate ways. The only rule we have is to not get attached.

I thought that it would be a piece of cake to follow it but the more time I spend around my new roomie, the more I realize that I’m in real trouble of breaking our one and only rule.


About Rebecca Wilder

 

USA Today Bestselling Author Rebecca Wilder writes contemporary and new adult romance. She loves writing about opposites attracting and finding their happily ever afters. When she’s not spending time with her family or friends, she’s reading romance books, watching stand-up comedies, or crime TV shows. She’s also a total Pinterest addict, dog lover, tea snob, and a wannabe yogi.

Follow: Facebook | Reader Group | Twitter | Instagram | Pinterest | Goodreads | BookBub | Website | Amazon | Newsletter

About The Meet Cute Book Club Series

 
Escape with the Meet Cute Book Club where meet-cutes don't only happen between the pages of romance novels and members find their own happily ever afters. Eight single women bound by their love of books take a monthly break from real life to lose themselves in the chapters of romantic fiction. From friends to lovers to fake relationships and more, each story features a brand new couple and their journey to find love from an amazing lineup of authors including Louise Lennox, Tracy Broemmer, A.M. Williams, Mel Walker, RJ Gray, Rebecca Wilder, Julie Archer, and Kate Stacy. These eight standalone romances are packed with meet-cutes, heat, and of course a happily ever after!

This promotional event is brought to you by The Indie Pen PR

quarta-feira, 27 de julho de 2022

Blog tour: THE LOST AND FOUND GIRL by Maisey Yates



THE LOST AND FOUND GIRL

Author: Maisey Yates

ISBN: 9781335503206

Publication Date: July 26, 2022

Publisher: HQN Books


Buy Links: 

BookShop.org

Harlequin 

Barnes & Noble

Amazon

Books-A-Million

Powell’s 


Social Links:

Author Website: http://www.maiseyyates.com/

Facebook: Maisey Yates

Twitter: @maiseyyates

Instagram: @MaiseyYates


Author Bio: 

Maisey Yates is a New York Times bestselling author of over one hundred romance novels. Whether she's writing strong, hard working cowboys, dissolute princes or multigenerational family stories, she loves getting lost in fictional worlds. An avid knitter with a dangerous yarn addiction and an aversion to housework, Maisey lives with her husband and three kids in rural Oregon. Check out her website, maiseyyates.com or find her on Facebook.


Book Summary:

The small Oregon town of Pear Blossom welcomes the return of its prodigal daughter Ruby McKee. Found abandoned as a baby by the McKee family, Ruby is the unofficial town mascot, but when she and her adoptive sisters start investigating the true circumstances around her discovery, it soon becomes clear that this small town is hiding the biggest, and darkest, of secrets. A raw, powerful exploration of the lengths people go to protect their loved ones, for fans of Lori Wilde and Carolyn Brown. Ruby McKee is a miracle. It’s a miracle she survived, abandoned as a newborn baby. A miracle that she was found by the McKee sisters. Her discovery allowed the community of Pear Blossom, Oregon, broken by a devastating crime, to heal. Since then, Ruby has lived a charmed life. But she can’t let go of the need to know why she was abandoned, and she’s tired of not having answers. Dahlia McKee knows it’s not right to resent Ruby for being special. But uncovering the truth about sister Ruby’s origins could allow Dahlia to carve her own place in Pear Blossom history… if she’s brave enough to follow her heart. Widowed sister Lydia McKee doesn’t have time for Ruby’s what if’s – when Lydia’s right now is so, so hard. Her husband’s best friend Chase might be offering to share some of the load, but can Lydia ever trust her instincts around him? Marianne Martin is glad that her youngest sister is back in town, but balancing Ruby’s crusade with the way her own life is imploding is turning into a bigger chore than she imagined. Especially when Ruby starts overturning secrets about the past that Marianne has spent a lifetime trying to pretend don’t exist. And when the truth about Ruby’s miraculous origins, and the crime from long ago, turn out to be connected in ways no one could have expected, will the McKee sisters band together, or fall apart?



Excerpt

one

Ruby

Only two truly remarkable things had ever happened in the small town of Pear Blossom, Oregon. The first occurred in 1999, when Caitlin Groves disappeared one fall evening on her way home from her boyfriend’s family orchard.

The second was in 2000, when newborn Ruby McKee was discovered on Sentinel Bridge, the day before Christmas Eve.

It wasn’t as if Pear Blossom hadn’t had excitement before then. There was the introduction of pear orchards—an event which ultimately determined the town’s name—in the late 1800s. Outlaws who lay in wait to rob the mail coaches, and wolves and mountain lions who made meals of the farmers’ animals. The introduction of the railroad, electricity and a particularly active society of suffragettes, when women were lobbying for the right to vote.

But all of that blended into the broader context of history, not entirely dissimilar to the goings-on of every town in every part of the world, as men fought to tame a wild land and the land rose up and fought back.

Caitlin’s disappearance and Ruby’s appearance felt both specific and personal, and had scarred and healed—if Ruby took the proclamations of various citizens too literally, which she really tried not to do—the community.

Mostly, as Ruby got out of the car she’d hired at the airport and stood in front of Sentinel Bridge with a suitcase in one hand, she marveled at how idyllic and the same it all seemed.

The bridge itself was battered from the years. The wood dark and marred, but sturdy as ever. A white circle with a white 1917, denoting the year of its construction, was stenciled in the top center of the bridge, just above the tunnel that led to the other side, a pinhole of light visible in the darkness across the way.

It was only open to foot traffic now, with a road curving wide around it and carrying cars to the other side a different way. For years, Sentinel Bridge was closed, and it wasn’t until a community outreach and education effort in the mid nineties that it was reopened for people to walk on.

Ruby could have had the driver take her a different route.

But she wanted to cross the bridge.

“Are you sure you want me to leave you here?” her driver asked.

She’d told him when she’d gotten into his car that she was from here originally, and he’d still spent the drive explaining local landmarks to her, so she wasn’t all that surprised he didn’t trust her directive to leave her in the middle of nowhere.

He was the kind of man who just knew best.

They’d just driven through the town proper. All brick—red and white and yellow—the sidewalks lined with trees whose leaves matched as early fall took hold. It was early, and the town had still been sleepy, most of the shops closed. There had been a runner or two out, an older man—Tom Swenson—walking his dog. But otherwise it had been empty. Still, it bore more marks of civilization than where they stood now.

The bridge was nearly engulfed in trees, some of which were evergreen, others beginning to show rusted hints of autumn around the edges. A golden shaft of light cut over the treetops, bathing the front of the bridge in a warm glow, illuminating the long wooden walk—where the road ended—that led to the covered portion, but shrouding the entrance in darkness.

She could see what the man in the car saw. Something abandoned and eerie and disquieting.

But Ruby only saw the road home.

“It’s fine,” she said.

She did not explain that her parents’ farm was just up the road, and she walked this way all the time.

That it was only a quarter of a mile from where she’d been found as a baby.

She had to cross the bridge nearly every day when she was in town, so she didn’t always think of it. But some days, days like this after she’d been away awhile, she had a strange, hushed feeling in her heart, like she was about to pay homage at a grave.

“If you’re sure.” His tone clearly said she shouldn’t be, but he still took her easy wave as his invitation to go.

Ruby turned away from the retreating car and smiled, wrapping both hands around the handle of her battered brown suitcase. It wasn’t weathered from her own use. She’d picked it up at a charity shop in York, England, because she’d thought it had a good aesthetic and it was just small enough to be a carry-on, but wasn’t like one of those black wheeled things that everyone else had. 

She’d cursed while she’d lugged it through Heathrow and Newark and Denver, then finally Medford. Those wheely bags that were not unique at all had seemed more attractive each time her shoulders and arms throbbed from carrying the very lovely suitcase.

Ruby’s love of history was oftentimes not practical.

But it didn’t matter now. The ache in her arms had faded and she was nearly home.

Her parents would have come to pick her up from the airport but Ruby had swapped her flight in Denver to an earlier one so she didn’t have to hang around for half the day. It had just meant getting up and rushing out of the airport adjacent hotel she’d stayed in for only a couple of hours. Her Newark flight had gotten in at eleven thirty the night before and by the time she’d collected her bags, gotten to the hotel and stumbled into bed, it had been nearly one in the morning.

Then she’d been up again at three for the five o’clock flight into Medford, which had set her back on the ground around the time she’d taken off. Which had made her feel gritty and exhausted and wholly uncertain of the time. She’d passed through so many time zones nothing felt real.

She waved the driver off and took the first step forward. She paused at the entry to the bridge. She looked back over her shoulder at the bright sunshine around her and then took a step forward into the darkness. Light came up through the cracks between the wood on the ground and the walls. At the center of the bridge, there were two windows with no glass that looked out over the river below. It was by those windows that she’d been found.

She walked briskly through the bridge and then stopped. In spite of herself. She often walked on this bridge and never felt a thing. She rarely felt inclined to ponder the night that she was found. If she got ridiculous about that too often, then she would never get anything done. After all, she had to cross this bridge to get home.

But she was moving back to town, not just returning for a visit, and it felt right to mark the occasion with a stop at the place of her salvation. She paused for a moment, right at the spot between the two openings that looked out on the water.

She had been placed just there. Down on the ground. Wrapped in a blanket, but still so desperately tiny and alone.

She had always thought about the moment when her sisters had picked her up and brought her back to their parents. It was the moment that came before that she had a hard time with. The one where someone—it had to have been her birth mother—had set her down there, leaving her to fate. To die if she died, or live if she was found. And thankfully she’d been found, but there had been no way for the person who had set her there to know that would happen.

It had gotten below freezing that night.

If Marianne, Lydia and Dahlia hadn’t come walking through from the Christmas play rehearsal, then…

She didn’t cry. But a strange sort of hollowness spread out in her chest.

But she ignored it and decided to press on toward home. She walked through the darkness of the bridge, watching as the light, the exit loomed larger.

And once she was outside, she could breathe. Because it didn’t matter what had happened there. What mattered was every step she had taken thereafter. What mattered was this road back home.

She walked up the gravel-covered road, kicking rocks out of her way as she went. It was delightfully cold, the crisp morning a reminder of exactly why she loved Pear Blossom. It was completely silent out here except for the odd braying of a donkey and chirping birds. She looked down at the view below, at the way the mist hung over the pear trees in the orchard. The way it created a ring around the mountain, the proud peak standing out above it. A blanket of green and gold, rimmed with misty rose.

She breathed in deep and kept on walking, relishing the silence, relishing the sense of home.

She had spent the last four years studying history. Mostly abroad. She had engaged in every exchange program she could, because what was the point of studying history if you limited yourself to a country that was as young as the United States and to a coast as new as the West Coast.

She could remember the awe that she’d experienced walking on streets that were more than just a couple of hundred years old. The immense breadth of time that she had felt. And she had… Well, she had hoped that she would find answers somewhere. Because she had always believed that the answers to what ails you in the present could be found somewhere in the past.

And she’d explored the past. Thoroughly. Many different facets of it. And along the way, she done a bit of exploring of herself.

After all, that was half the reason she’d left. To try and figure out who she was outside of this place where everyone knew her, and her story.

Though, when she got close to people, it didn’t take long for them to discover her story. It was, after all, in the news.

Of course, she always found it interesting who discovered it on their own. Because that was revealing.

Who googled their friends.

Ruby obviously googled her friends, but that was because of her own background and experience. If those same friends had an equally salacious background, then it was forgivable. 

But if they were boring, then she found it deeply suspicious that they engaged in such activities.

She came over a slight rise in the road and before her was the McKee family farm. It had been in the McKee family for generations. And Ruby felt a profound sense of connection to it. It might not be her legacy by blood, but that had never mattered to the McKees, and it didn’t matter to her either. This town was part of who she was.

And maybe that was why no matter how she had searched elsewhere, she was drawn back here.

Dana Groves, her old mentor, had called her six months ago to tell her an archivist position was being created in the historical society with some newly allocated funds, and had offered the job to Ruby.

Ruby loved Pear Blossom, but she’d also felt like it was really important for her to go out in the world and see what else existed.

It was easy for her to be in Pear Blossom. People here loved her.

It had been a fascinating experience to go to a place where that wasn’t automatically the case. Of course, she hadn’t stayed in one place very long. After going to the University of Washington, she had gotten involved in different study abroad programs, and she had moved between them as often as she could. Studying in Italy, France, Spain, coming to the States briefly for her graduation ceremony in May, and then going back overseas to spend a few months in England, finishing up some elective study programs.

But then, she’d found that instructive too. Being in a constant state of meeting new people. And for a while, the sheer differentness of it all had fed her in a way that had quieted that restlessness. She had been learning. Learning and experiencing and… Well, part of her had wondered if her first job needed to be away from home. To continue her education.

But then six months ago her sister’s husband had died.

And Dana’s offer of a job in Pear Blosson after she finished her degree had suddenly seemed like fate. Because Ruby had to come and try to make things better for Lydia.

Marianne and Dahlia were worried about Lydia, who had retreated into herself and had barely shed a single tear.

She’s acting just like our parents. No fuss, no muss. No crying over spilled milk or dead husbands.

Clearly miserable, in other words.

And Ruby knew she was needed.

One thing about being saved, about being spared from death, was the certainty you were spared for a reason.

Ruby had been saved by her sisters. And if they ever needed her…

Well, she would be here.


Excerpted from The Lost and Found Girl by Maisey Yates. Copyright © 2022 by Maisey Yates. Published by arrangement with Harlequin Books S.A.


terça-feira, 26 de julho de 2022

Opinião: "No Café da Juventude Perdida"

Título original: Dans le café de la jeunesse perdue
Autor: Patrick Modiano
Tradutor: Isabel St. Aubyn
Editor: Asa
Edição/reimpressão: Outubro de 2014
ISBN: 9789892304540
Páginas: 112


Sinopse: Paris, anos 60. No café Condé reúnem-se poetas malditos, futuros situacionistas e estudantes. À nostalgia que impregna aquelas paredes junta-se um enigma personificado numa mulher: todas as personagens e histórias confluem na misteriosa Louki. Quatro homens contam-nos os seus encontros e desencontros com a filha de uma empregada do Molin-Rouge. Para quase todos eles, ela encarna o inalcançável objecto de desejo. Louki, tal como todos os boémios que vagueiam por uma Paris espectral, é uma personagem sem raízes, que inventa identidades e luta por construir um presente perpétuo. Modiano recria em redor da fascinante e comovente personagem desta mulher a Paris da sua juventude, enquanto constrói um maravilhoso romance sobre o poder da memória e a busca da identidade.


A minha opinião: Voltei a dar uma oportunidade a Patrick Modiano com este No Café da Juventude Perdida e, sinceramente, não é autor para mim. Consigo perceber o porquê da sua popularidade (o autor escreve muitíssimo bem), mas o seu estilo não é para mim…

No Café da Juventude Perdida passa-se na Paris dos anos 60 e tem como cenário principal o café Condé e que é um ponto de encontro de estudantes, poetas e artistas, todos eles insatisfeitos com a sociedade. A história é contada por quatro narradores e centra-se sobretudo na personagem Louki (também ela narradora da história).

Todos os narradores parecem encantados/obcecados com Louki e com o mistério de quem ela realmente é e de onde vem. O véu do mistério começa a ser levantado quando é ela a narradora, e continua com o narrador seguinte. A verdade é que a sua história é triste e trágica, o que talvez explique a persona que ela criou. Todos a amam e admiram e querem um pedaço dela, mas ninguém a conhece verdadeiramente. Não a pessoa real…

Quando comecei o livro pensei que fosse um retrato da época, contudo, é uma história de obsessão com uma mulher imaginada. Não fiquei a saber grande coisa sobre nenhum dos outros narradores, nem há nenhuma outra personagem que me tenha ficado na memória… Patrick Modiano escreve muito bem, mas não penso voltar a ler um dos seus livros.


Classificação: 2



segunda-feira, 25 de julho de 2022

Opinião: "Untouchable"

Autor: Kresley Cole
Série: Immortals After Dark #7
Editor: Simon & Schuster
Edição: Outubro de 2009
ISBN: 9781439166857
Páginas: 270


Sinopse: #1 NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLING AUTHOR KRESLEY COLE delivers a breathtaking tale of a brutal vampire soldier about to know love for the first time... and a Valkyrie aching for his touch.

Murdoch Wroth will stop at nothing to claim Daniela - the delicate Valkyrie who makes his heart beat for the first time in three hundred years. Yet the exquisite Danii is part ice fey, and her freezing skin can't be touched by anyone but her own kind without inflicting pain beyond measure. Can they conquer an agony of frustration and slake the overwhelming desire burning between them?

Classificação: 4


Enredos: parceiros predestinados, proximidade forçada, não se podem tocar, alguém a quer matar. 



domingo, 24 de julho de 2022

Opinião: "The Earl Who Played With Fire"

Autor: Sara Ramsey
Série: Muses of Mayfair #4
Editor: Auto-publicado
Edição/reimpressão: Novembro de 2013
ISBN: 9781938312076
Formato: Ebook
Páginas: 320


Sinopse: A woman courting ruin...

No one would suspect prim, proper Prudence Etchingham of lusting after her best friend’s brother. Nor would anyone guess that she’s responsible for dozens of the best forgeries in London’s antiquities markets. But if her love for Alex is doomed to fail, she must raise enough money to escape the marriage mart. She just needs one last, daring forgery to set herself up for life...

A man evading disaster...

Alex Staunton, the rich Earl of Salford, lives a charmed existence. No one knows that he’s dangerously attracted to his sister’s best friend. Nor has he revealed that he suffers from an ancient curse—one that has given him everything, but prevents him from marrying the woman of his dreams. But when an enemy from his past takes an unseemly interest in Prudence’s future, Alex must find a way to break the curse... or risk losing her forever.

A love they’re destined for...

Every seductive encounter brings them closer together—but their secret, smoldering desires will inevitably burn them. And when Prudence’s illicit forgery collides with Alex’s desperate search, more than their hearts are at stake. Can they break Alex’s curse and save Prudence from her unwanted suitor? Or will their love become a weapon that will destroy them both?


A minha opinião: E cheguei, finalmente, à história da Prudence! Quem acompanha a série já sabe que Prudence Etchingham está completamente apaixonada pelo irmão da sua melhor amiga, Alex Staunton, o Conde de Salford. Infelizmente, não parece ser correspondida…

Depois de uma tentativa de casamento arranjado que resolveria todos os problemas financeiros da sua família, e que terminou com o seu potencial noivo a casar com a sua melhor amiga, Prudence está determinada em conseguir independência financeira a qualquer custo. O que, neste caso, implica fazer um último e grande golpe. É que o talento de Pru consiste em fazer falsificações quase perfeitas de antiguidades e foi a vendê-las como verdadeiras que conseguiu já amealhar uma boa soma.

Na verdade, Alex é louco por Pru. Mas acredita estar amaldiçoado e tem de quebrar a maldição antes de poder confessar os seus sentimentos por ela. Não ajuda o facto dela estar a viver na casa dele como companhia da sua mãe…

A Pru deste livro é uma Pru diferente do primeiro. A vida tornou-a amarga e um pouco ressentida por ser a única a quem parece estar negada a felicidade. Ela não quer ter ciúmes das amigas, principalmente de Amelia que, afinal, está a viver a vida que podia ter sido a sua. Não que ela se quisesse casar realmente com Malcom (sempre quis casar por amor), mas não consegue deixar de pensar no que poderia ter sido…

Mas é também esta dualidade de sentimentos que, aliada ao facto de ter sido, mais uma vez, rejeitada por Alex, que lhe dá a força para colocar o seu plano em curso. Irá fazer uma última falsificação e, com o dinheiro da sua venda, irá comprar uma casinha e sustentar-se sem precisar de marido. E irá falsificar precisamente aquilo que Alex procura há anos, sem sucesso. Nada como o doce sabor da vingança…

Alex procura há anos, sem sucesso, a chave que lhe permita quebrar a maldição e, agora, esta descoberta pode significar, não só o final da maldição, mas também um futuro ao lado da mulher que ainda não se pode permitir amar. O que acaba por dar a Alex esperança que não consegue disfarçar ao lidar com Pru. Mas o que acontecerá quando ele descobrir que é falsa? Conseguirá ele quebrar a maldição antes de ceder à força dos seus sentimentos por Pru? E ainda há que lidar com a interferência do seu antigo amigo, o Duque de Thorckington, também ele amaldiçoado, mas sem qualquer vontade de quebrar a maldição…

Este era o livro da série que eu mais queria ler e não me desapontou. Ainda que a Pru não seja a mesma de antigamente, consegui compreender as suas motivações e, especialmente depois de saber também o porquê de Alex ser tão distante, só podia torcer para que eles tivessem, finalmente, o seu final feliz.

Fiquei um bocadinho desapontada com o elemento mágico da história, teria preferido que a resolução fosse diferente, mas suponho que fosse necessário, sobretudo no que à parte da maldição do seu némesis dizia respeito.

Foi muito bom rever os outros casais da série e adorei perceber que também os maridos se tornaram grandes amigos, não só uns dos outros, mas também de Alex (na medida do possível, já que ele não deixava ninguém aproximar-se muito dele).

A autora escreveu também a história do Duque de Thorckington e eu mal posso esperar para descobrir como é que ela o conseguiu redimir…


Classificação: 4